Objector gets steamed up over plans for veggie food festival coming to Victoria Park
Getting ready for one 'veg in the park' event... but will Covid emergency stop it coming to Victoria Park in 2021? Picture: Veg In The Park - Credit: Veg In The Park
Next summer’s first vegetarian food festival planned in Victoria Park could be off the menu if the Covid crisis isn’t over by then, Tower Hamlets Council’s legal advisor has warned.
Organisers have asked for the green light to add to their green vegetable show “once the virus is under control”.
The proposed festival, which has met one objection so far, has been running at venues up and down the country for the past 20 years.
Now it could come to Vicky Park in 2021 for the first time—as long as the pandemic is over by then.
Organiser Neil Levene has asked for a music licence to stage live entertainment for up to 3,000 veggie fans.
You may also want to watch:
“We couldn’t stage it this year because of the emergency,” he told the council’s licensing sub-committee.
“Victoria Park is the only suitable venue in east London, but there are strict safety measures to meet.”
Most Read
- 1 'Grenfell Tower'-type cladding still not removed from New Providence Wharf after 3 years
- 2 Cops break Covid-19 rules to have haircuts at Bethnal Green police station
- 3 Whitechapel murder victim named as teenager charged with killing
- 4 Murder arrest after woman stabbed to death in Whitechapel this morning
- 5 Covid hero who did charity walk in Bow aged 100 now has vaccine
- 6 Leyton Orient boss Embleton could rotate team for Bolton trip
- 7 Man sentenced after teenage boy groomed on Snapchat to sell heroin
- 8 'It must be urgently addressed': New research into BAME Covid impact
- 9 Lovely Day for Aldgate School picked to sing on Billy Ocean's new single
- 10 Police e-fit expert retiring after 15 years at Bethnal Green
The committee has received one objection to the week-long event going ahead next year, from a woman living near the park.
But the promotor assured council members that his company has been running events for 20 years without incident.
Up to 3,000 tickets would be sold in advance for the Veg In The Park festival where people would sample vegetarian dishes from 20 restaurants taking part. Exhibitors would give cookery demos in afternoon and evening sessions and live music would be staged by east London artists followed by a headline act.
“We’re hoping the guidelines will change by 2021,” Mr Levene added. “At the moment we don’t expect to be able to hold the festival and won’t plan it in the present circumstances, only once the virus is under control and conditions allow.”
The Covid regulations would prevent gatherings of 3,000 people if the guidelines are still in place next year, the council’s legal advisor told committee members.
The organisers were due to stage 13 events this year—all having been cancelled.
The “Veg in the Park Festival” is a working title inspired by community projects around the country such as the venture started two years ago at Oldham in Greater Manchester. Other community vegetable-growing projects include gardens in Shadwell on spare land next to the DLR and Fenchurch railway arches along Cable Street.